San Diego Union-Tribune

2 AGENCIES UNITE TO PROMOTE ORLANDO

Tourism and economic developmen­t groups join forces in marketing

- BY MIKE SCHNEIDER Schneider writes for The Associated Press.

It’s an idea that almost seems as compatible as Mickey and Minnie. Take the tens of millions of tourists who are thinking about visiting central Florida’s theme parks each year and sell them on the virtues of moving their companies or businesses to the region. In the half-century that Orlando has been a tourism hub, it had not been done, until now.

The quasi-public agencies that usually promote tourism and economic developmen­t separately in Orlando announced Monday that they are joining forces to market the region together under a single brand. With a tagline of “Unbelievab­ly Real,” the branding plan will be aimed at tourists, meeting planners, convention­eers, business relocation specialist­s, site selectors, business owners and company CEOs. Around $23 million will be spent on it this year.

The branding plan was announced as officials reported that 59.3 million tourists came to Orlando in 2021.

That represents a 68 percent increase over 2020’s pandemicWa­lt stricken numbers, but it is still less than 80 percent of 2019’s prepandemi­c figures.

“Looking at 2021, we started seeing some really strong numbers,” said Casandra Matej, president and CEO of Visit Orlando.

The branding plan highlights Orlando’s economic strengths in digital game developmen­t and military simulation, combined with its tourist attraction­s, its outdoor activities and its cultural, sports and food scenes. It started Monday with television and digital ads in New York, Chicago and Boston, as well as a mural in Brooklyn, N.Y.

The goal is tell “the entire story of Orlando,“Matej said. “While we may have different target audiences, there’s a lot of connection between those audiences.“

With the growth of remote working during the pandemic, the timing of the joint branding seemed right, officials said.

“The same person making a corporate relocation decision is probably the same person bringing their family to Orlando and has probably attended a meeting here in the last couple of years,” said Tim Giuliani, president and CEO of the Orlando Economic Partnershi­p. “When people come to us about relocating to Orlando, it’s not their first time in Orlando. It’s a global brand.”

Disney World is celebratin­g its 50th anniversar­y this year, and a long-awaited Guardians of the Galaxy ride at its Epcot park is opening later this month. But it’s not just rides that stand to lure more visitors.

Orlando Internatio­nal Airport is nearing completion on its largest expansion ever, adding 15 gates that can accommodat­e an additional 10 million to 12 million passengers annually. The private Brightline train service also is expanding within the next year to Orlando, offering a two-hour ride from South Florida to the Orlando airport.

The expanded capacity at Orlando Internatio­nal Airport represents another synergy between tourism and economic developmen­t. Driven by the tourism market, the expansion will bring more airlines and travel routes to Orlando, making the area more attractive to companies or businesses that want to relocate, Giuliani said.

“It creates tremendous connectivi­ty,” Giuliani said. “As more companies have global interests, concerns, connectivi­ty, that ease in and out allows Orlando to compete with any city.”

The tourism numbers released Monday by Visit Orlando ref lect the ways visitors coming to Orlando were affected by pandemic restrictio­ns.

The 2021 increase over 2020 was driven by domestic visitors, with business and internatio­nal tourists lagging in growth.

While domestic visitation­s grew by 70 percent, it grew only by almost 54 percent for business and 25.7 percent for internatio­nal travelers.

In an effort to control the coronaviru­s, the U.S. imposed border restrictio­ns on nonessenti­al travel from Canada and Mexico. Many of those restrictio­ns were lifted last November, but internatio­nal travelers are still required to be vaccinated, and those traveling by air must show a negative coronaviru­s test.

Domestic leisure visits in 2021 were 85 percent of those in 2019, before the pandemic. The numbers in 2021 were two-thirds of those in 2019 for domestic business travel and less than a third for internatio­nal visits.

After the U.S. dropped some pandemic restrictio­ns last November, Orlando started seeing upticks in internatio­nal visitors, Matej said.

“As soon as the rules of engagement changed in November, we started seeing real interest from our core markets,” Matej said. “We’re expecting by 2023 for internatio­nal to be 100 percent recovered.”

 ?? TED SHAFFREY AP ?? Central Florida’s branding plan is aimed at tourists, meeting planners, convention­eers, business relocation specialist­s, site selectors, business owners and company CEOs. Pictured: a float at Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World Resort.
TED SHAFFREY AP Central Florida’s branding plan is aimed at tourists, meeting planners, convention­eers, business relocation specialist­s, site selectors, business owners and company CEOs. Pictured: a float at Magic Kingdom Park at Walt Disney World Resort.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States